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That year they gave Tess her first typewriter. She’d not need to borrow her brother’s battered old piece or write down her fragile poems in her spiderlike scrawl as her father called it. The promise came while she was getting her mind together in that mental asylum, after the mucky love affair that went no place and left her hanging there, like one crucified for all to see and most to softly mutter and stare. Get yourself mended girl, Father said, and we’ll buy you your own typewriter, so you can stab away on the keys to your heart’s content and bring out those poems of yours. He never read her poems, never read much apart from the back page sport or gawked at page 3 girls with a tut tutting tongue. That year she gazed out of the wide barred window of the asylum at the snow on fields, at the seagulls gathering and feeding behind the faraway tractor as it ploughed, at the grey depressing sky, wondering what it’d be like to not be, wondering what the woman with a cast in her eye, was doing to herself in the toilets, one night when she’d gone in to *** unable to sleep. The typewriter idea and promise kind of got her through the dark hours and the ECT, and the following day headaches and numbness. After slitting her wrists (mildly, a cry for help) she said on the phone to her father, Come get me out of this place, help me get back together. Ok, he said, Miss Humpty Dumpty, and he put down the phone, and she stood in the hall of the asylum with the receiver in her hand, the image of the typewriter before her eyes, those poems banging on the inside of her head, new ones wanting to get out, old ones left for dead.
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May 22, 2012
May 22, 2012 at 2:14 AM UTC
TESS'S TYPEWRITER.
That year they gave Tess her first typewriter. She’d not need to borrow her brother’s battered old piece or write down her fragile poems in her spiderlike scrawl as her father called it. The promise came while she was getting her mind together in that mental asylum, after the mucky love affair that went no place and left her hanging there, like one crucified for all to see and most to softly mutter and stare. Get yourself mended girl, Father said, and we’ll buy you your own typewriter, so you can stab away on the keys to your heart’s content and bring out those poems of yours. He never read her poems, never read much apart from the back page sport or gawked at page 3 girls with a tut tutting tongue. That year she gazed out of the wide barred window of the asylum at the snow on fields, at the seagulls gathering and feeding behind the faraway tractor as it ploughed, at the grey depressing sky, wondering what it’d be like to not be, wondering what the woman with a cast in her eye, was doing to herself in the toilets, one night when she’d gone in to *** unable to sleep. The typewriter idea and promise kind of got her through the dark hours and the ECT, and the following day headaches and numbness. After slitting her wrists (mildly, a cry for help) she said on the phone to her father, Come get me out of this place, help me get back together. Ok, he said, Miss Humpty Dumpty, and he put down the phone, and she stood in the hall of the asylum with the receiver in her hand, the image of the typewriter before her eyes, those poems banging on the inside of her head, new ones wanting to get out, old ones left for dead.
terry-collett
Written by
May 22, 2012
May 22, 2012 at 2:14 AM UTC
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